This is a TBA course. TBA means "time to be arranged" (to accommodate as many students as we can).
We hold an organizational meeting for all TBA courses at the beginning of each semester.
The time and place of the meeting are posted under "Current Announcements" at our
home page, russian.cornell.edu (click Welcome in the navigation bar on the left).

Russian 6634 is a variable credit course. It meets once or twice a week for 50 or 70 minutes each time (depending on the number of credits and assignment type). Discuss with your teacher the number of credits to register for. The decision regarding the work load is usually made at the organizational meeting where the materials and format for the course are discussed and defined.

This course is taught differently each year depending on the interests
of the students who take it. This is also discussed at the organizational
meeting.

The course is open to native as well as non-native speakers of Russian.

This semester, the course is about translating American movie culture to Russian. You will watch American films, then discuss them in Russian, and write an essay on each film in Russian. Both the discussion and the essays will, we hope, evolve into a continuous conversation about the two cultures as presented in the films. The films will have a common theme or themes, and we'll work with more than one film from each director.

In 2016, we taught this as a course in public speech, one of its incarnations mentioned below. Each student selects her own readings for each class and prepares a seven-to-ten minute presentation on the issues that seem of interest. The purpose of making the preparation is to practice speaking clearly, elegantly, and effectively. The rest of the group will serve as an intelligent audience: pertinent questions, additional or counter examples and arguments are expected.

In 2014, we heard one presentation a week from each student, each week on a different subject that was picked by the students as we went along. In each class, all presentations were on the same subject. People spoke for 7 to 10 minutes, and discussion followed. Speakers were asked to stay on topic, but not to dwell on things that were too specialized. Each presenter sent a draft of his or her presentation to Slava about 36 hours before the class. Slava returned these with comments and suggestions on the eve of the class.

Some years (e.g. 2015) 6634 was taught as a practical translation course. We analyzed
several classic Russian translations of English-language literary texts
published in Russia as well as some Russian literary works published in English in
the English-speaking world. The rest of the semester was sometimes spent translating
American short stories into Russian and comparing the
students' translations to published professional translations of the same works.

In 2013, we had lots of fun working with
Daniil Kharms' prose for four weeks. First, we analyzed a few published translations, then composed our own, and finished by writing (and then translating) a bunch of stories à la Kharms. Here they are:
three by Katya,
two by Maya,
and
two by Yasha, all pretty irreverent. Some of our translations from Kharms'
Весёлые ребята
can be read
here.

Some years, this was a course in speaking Russian in a variety of styles, and then
analyzing sound recordings of these discussions: what could have been said differently?
What could have been said better? What speech patterns should be avoided,
and what speech patterns need to be developed and cultivated?

Once, recently, we spent most of the semester rendering in Russian
(not translating) American media publications from various periodicals
in various fields as well doing the reverse: writing accounts of
Russian media stories in good academic English.

A variety of other matters related to Russian can also be treated in this course.
We're open to suggestions.
Come to the organizational meeting and talk to us.

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